I posted this question on facebook last night:
What kind of eReader does everyone have? do you do any reading on a multi-purpose device like an iPad, smart phone or jo schmo laptop?
In 21 hours I got 31 responses (and counting), all from people telling me how much they love their eReaders. Kindles, iPads, iPhones, Sony eReaders, Android phones, Playbook etc.
A few minutes later I posted this:
Does anyone use an eReader (ipad/pod/phone) with kids?
I got a response that said "I read an article that said parents use real books with kids because of the tactile effect."
ONE person responded.
When I discussed this with a book-loving friend of mine, she said that eBooks for children sound vaguely unwholesome. Is this true?
We are very willing to consume eBooks ourselves, and play show and tell with our fancy gadgets, but we shut the party down when little Bobby pokes his head around the corner. Why?
eBooks for children: a brave new world. Let's talk about it!
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
eBook Review: ABC Letters in the Library
I hate that this book is one of the first that new eBook readers may encounter. I'm sure many well-intentioned caregivers will click on the cute image of children in the stacks and see the blurb that begins:
"This lovingly written, playfully illustrated book introduces children to both the alphabet and the library, through wonderfully descriptive, alliterative language."
Oh! It's written with love! It contains library stuff, alphabet stuff and alliterative language stuff!
It's a pile of elephant doody. School Library Journal gave it a passable review, but I think the reviewer was just being nice because it's a book about libraries. My tingling librarian senses are telling me that the quality of eBooks is going to continue to be an issue. Any old ninny/publisher can put their junk up and call it an eBook without the quality control that (sometimes) comes from being part of a huge evil corporation, which truly is the Beauty and the Beast of the thing. There aren't a whole lot of purveyors of fine eBooks for kids yet, so libraries that are trying to keep astride with eBook technology are limited in what they can offer.
Some highlights from Bonnie Farmer and Chum McLeod's ABC Letters in the Library:
This is only MOSTLY true, except for things arranged by a little something called the Dewey Decimal System. And in series of books that have different authors. And board books, because, why bother? And other pull-out collections that are arranged by genre/format first before author. But those things don’t rhyme. Badly. Like this book does.
Um.... what? There is an illustration of computers doing karaoke. I have no response to that.
Excuse me? Has the author even BEEN to the children’s section of a public library recently? And who is this super librarian who can ACTUALLY “hush all talk” with a “soft shhhhh?” Anyone who has ever worked with children, or talked to a child, or even talked to someone who has talked to a child knows that ain’t gonna fly.
Yes! The information flows freely through the interwebs! In a book about libraries, don't you think it would be better to highlight some other source for authenticated information? Kids KNOW about the internet. Let's talk about Indexes! Interlibrary Loan! Intellectual Freedom!
(Initially I made a crack about how "freely" EBSCO and Gale flow through the internet, but decided against it. Then decided to include it parenthetically. All you collection developers crying over your budgets out there, can I get a AMEN?)
Security! Escort that tsking teacher OUT of my library this instant. Loud teens? Come on over to the teen area! We love that you’re here at the library! Is this a good time for you guys to meet here? Shall we start a gaming club? Teen Advisory Board? Knitting group? Want a good book to read now that the Twicraze is coming to a badly needed end? Need to get some community service hours? What about some help studying for the PSAT? Turn that shrug upside down, future tax payer. Welcome to the library. YOUR library.
"This lovingly written, playfully illustrated book introduces children to both the alphabet and the library, through wonderfully descriptive, alliterative language."
Oh! It's written with love! It contains library stuff, alphabet stuff and alliterative language stuff!
It's a pile of elephant doody. School Library Journal gave it a passable review, but I think the reviewer was just being nice because it's a book about libraries. My tingling librarian senses are telling me that the quality of eBooks is going to continue to be an issue. Any old ninny/publisher can put their junk up and call it an eBook without the quality control that (sometimes) comes from being part of a huge evil corporation, which truly is the Beauty and the Beast of the thing. There aren't a whole lot of purveyors of fine eBooks for kids yet, so libraries that are trying to keep astride with eBook technology are limited in what they can offer.
Some highlights from Bonnie Farmer and Chum McLeod's ABC Letters in the Library:
"Aisles of authors are arranged alphabetically" |
"Humming computers collect countless call numbers." |
"The librarians soft shhhhhh soon hushes all talk” |
"Information flows freely in and out of the Internet" |
(Initially I made a crack about how "freely" EBSCO and Gale flow through the internet, but decided against it. Then decided to include it parenthetically. All you collection developers crying over your budgets out there, can I get a AMEN?)
"Teachers tsk at loud teens who grin and then shrug" |
Monday, November 28, 2011
Inaugural Little eLit
Hooray! This is the inaugural post documenting our experiences with eBooks. Little J and I sat on the couch, fired up the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 and went to our library's website.
"eBooks!" said Little J.
"eBooks!" said I.
"Password!" said Scholastic.
Scholastic's BookFlix portal, when accessed from the link from our library's website, has got to be the most boring way to begin an eBook adventure EVER. I assume this is a general log in page for a number of services that Scholastic offers.
"How dull! You'd think they'd at LEAST add a dancing banana to amuse us while we wait!" said Little J. (He's two. I might be paraphrasing what he said a little.)
We dutifully typed in our library card number and waited with bated breath, sans banana.
"We read Boo Hoo Bird?" said Little J hopefully, holding up his paper copy of Jeremy Tankard's awesome book.
"Wait a minute for it to load, baby. We're going to read an eBook!"
Two years olds love waiting for websites to load almost as much as they love waiting for Laurie Berkner to buffer on YouTube. We gave up on Bookflix and moved on to Tumblebooks.
The Tumblebooks "library" is organized into six sections: storybooks, read alongs, tumble tv, puzzles & games, language learning and non-fiction books. We were on the prowl for a good yarn, so we clicked "storybooks" and chose a book from the first page: Bonnie Farmer and Chum McLeod's ABC Letters in the Library.
Tumblepad, the software that Tumblebooks uses to display its content, didn't require installation- it just popped up when we chose our eBook (we will try downloading an eBook for use without an internet connection in future posts). I liked the dashboard well enough, but the display area didn't shrink to fit onto our screen. I had to scroll around every now and then to see the text. That seems like a pretty basic requirement: fitting onto the screen. I tried a number of other eBooks and had the same problem. I tried holding the tablet portrait and landscape. No dice.
We got through ABC Letters in the Library, mostly because it was our very FIRST Little eLit eBook and I was trying to be magnanimous about it all. ABC Letters in the Library contains forced rhymes and outdated views on what a public library is all about. See an extended review this book here.
"eBooks!" said Little J.
"eBooks!" said I.
"Password!" said Scholastic.
Scholastic's BookFlix portal, when accessed from the link from our library's website, has got to be the most boring way to begin an eBook adventure EVER. I assume this is a general log in page for a number of services that Scholastic offers.
"How dull! You'd think they'd at LEAST add a dancing banana to amuse us while we wait!" said Little J. (He's two. I might be paraphrasing what he said a little.)
We dutifully typed in our library card number and waited with bated breath, sans banana.
"We read Boo Hoo Bird?" said Little J hopefully, holding up his paper copy of Jeremy Tankard's awesome book.
"Wait a minute for it to load, baby. We're going to read an eBook!"
Two years olds love waiting for websites to load almost as much as they love waiting for Laurie Berkner to buffer on YouTube. We gave up on Bookflix and moved on to Tumblebooks.
The Tumblebooks "library" is organized into six sections: storybooks, read alongs, tumble tv, puzzles & games, language learning and non-fiction books. We were on the prowl for a good yarn, so we clicked "storybooks" and chose a book from the first page: Bonnie Farmer and Chum McLeod's ABC Letters in the Library.
Tumblepad, the software that Tumblebooks uses to display its content, didn't require installation- it just popped up when we chose our eBook (we will try downloading an eBook for use without an internet connection in future posts). I liked the dashboard well enough, but the display area didn't shrink to fit onto our screen. I had to scroll around every now and then to see the text. That seems like a pretty basic requirement: fitting onto the screen. I tried a number of other eBooks and had the same problem. I tried holding the tablet portrait and landscape. No dice.
We got through ABC Letters in the Library, mostly because it was our very FIRST Little eLit eBook and I was trying to be magnanimous about it all. ABC Letters in the Library contains forced rhymes and outdated views on what a public library is all about. See an extended review this book here.
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